Obama: Ban assault weapons

President says it’s time for nation to enact legislation to help prevent violence like school shooting

Lesley Clark And David Lightman
McClatchy-Tribune

December 20, 2012 - Updated: 4:17 a.m.

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama urged Congress on Wednesday to ban the sale of military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition clips, and said Vice President Joe Biden would lead an effort to stem an “epidemic of gun violence that plagues this country every single day.”

Obama said he’d asked Biden to deliver his recommendations by next month, and the president pledged to move quickly to enact them.

“This is not some Washington commission,” Obama said, speaking at the White House five days after a lone gunman in Connecticut opened fire in an elementary school with a semi-automatic rifle, killing 20 first-graders and six adults. “This is not something where folks are going to be studying the issue for six months and publishing a report that gets read and then pushed aside. This is a team that has a very specific task to pull together real reforms right now.”

The Biden-led team, which will include members of the president’s Cabinet and outside organizations, also will look at improving access to mental health services and, Obama said, at a “culture that, all too often, glorifies guns and violence.”

The president argued that there’s a growing consensus for stepped-up gun control, contending that a majority of Americans support banning the sale of military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition clips. He said most Americans also supported background checks before gun purchases, including those at gun shows, and he urged the incoming Congress to vote on gun control “in a timely manner.”

An ABC News/Washington Post poll taken after the Connecticut shooting found that 54 percent of Americans favor stricter gun-control laws in general.

The powerful gun lobby has resisted most new regulations. Obama said he believed that the Second Amendment “guarantees an individual a right to bear arms,” but he added that he also believes that most gun owners think the U.S. “should be able to keep an irresponsible, lawbreaking few from buying a weapon of war.”

Though the mood in Congress on gun control has shifted since the Connecticut massacre, it’s not clear whether Republicans, who control the House of Representatives, will soften their opposition to a ban on assault weapons.

Incoming House Judiciary Committee Chairman Robert Goodlatte, R-Va., pledged to “listen to and carefully review suggestions made by the president’s task force and other groups to see what we can do to prevent a terrible tragedy like this in the future.”

Attitudes are clearly changing.

“This time is different. You know the time is different because there’s so much anger,” said Rep. Carolyn McCarthy, D-N.Y., whose husband was killed in a shooting on the Long Island Rail Road in 1993.

It’s different for two reasons: Democrats are actively pushing for change, after years of not pressing the issue, and many Republicans are at least hesitant to speak out against gun control.

Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said it was “time to study these mass shootings.”

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, when he was asked whether it’s time to act on gun control, deferred to Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.

Reid said this week that he was willing to consider different proposals, saying that “every idea should be on the table as we discuss how best to keep our children safe.” That stance is emblematic of a subtle but important shift among Democrats, who for years have largely shied away from considering major gun legislation.

In the House, Democratic leaders said they’d create a task force to study steps Congress can take.

Chairing the panel will be Rep. Mike Thompson, D-Calif., a gun owner, avid hunter and former co-chairman of the Congressional Sportsmen’s Caucus who describes himself as a “combat veteran who carried an assault rifle in Vietnam.” But he’s adamant about gun control.

“Military-type assault weapons and assault magazines have no place on our streets and in our communities,” he said.

Obama has supported reinstating an assault weapons ban that expired in 2004, but he hasn’t championed legislation to make that happen. He said Wednesday that he’d been busy with the economy and two wars.

First proposals

President Barack Obama urged the new Congress that convenes Jan. 3 to vote rapidly on measures that he says a majority of Americans support:

• Ban the sale of military-style assault weapons.

• Ban the sale of high-capacity ammunition clips.

• Require criminal background checks for all gun buyers by removing loopholes that cover some sales, such as at gun shows.

• Confirm his nominee to lead the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms after years of delay.

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